Yahoo – AFP, Septime Meunier,
12 June 2014
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The bank
says Chodron de Courcel, aged 64, was taking retirement at his
own request.
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A major dispute between the
United States and France over penalties threatening BNP Paribas took a sudden
turn on Thursday with the removal of a top executive at the French bank.
The departure of chief
operating officer Georges Chodron de Courcel signals a concession to ward off a
massive fine, reported possibly to exceed $10 billion (7.4 billion euros).
At the beginning of June,
various sources told AFP that the bank would sack Chodron de Courcel to placate
US judicial authorities.
The New York banking regulator
Benjamin Lawsky called several months ago for him to be dismissed, AFP has
learnt.
The Wall Street Journal
newspaper has reported that US authorities had also obtained the removal of
another senior executive at the bank, Vivien Levy-Garboua, former head of
internal controls in North America and now an adviser to the top management.
Altogether, Lawsky is said by
various sources to have demanded that a dozen bankers should lose their jobs
over the incriminated transactions.
The announcement on Thursday
is a crucial development in the case, since France has said that what it considers
the threat of "disproportionate" penalties against the bank on
charges of sanctions busting could upset talks on a vast free-trade pact
between the 28-member European Union and United States.
But the bank presented the
sudden ending of Chodron de Courtcel's functions, on June 30, as retirement
with effect from September 30 after a lifelong career of 42 years at the bank,
without mentioning the charges by US judicial officials.
The dispute is a hot subject
for France, and Chodron de Courcel, aged 64, is a high-profile figure in French
banking and industry, and is also a cousin of Bernadette Chirac, wife of former
French President Jacques Chirac.
President Hollande has raised
the matter several times with US President Barack Obama, the latest occasion
being over a dinner in Paris last week even though Obama has made clear he
cannot intervene in a judicial process.
The case turns on charges that
between 2002 and 2009 BNP Paribas, a leading French and European bank, broke
sanctions against Iran, Sudan and Cuba by carrying out dollar transactions with
those countries.
High stakes
The stakes are high for the
bank, which risks a huge fine, and maybe a temporary suspension of dollar
transactions or even of its US banking licence.
France argued that the stakes
are high also for the international financial system, and for bank lending and
economic recovery in Europe, saying that the knock-on effects of such
penalties, and possibly against other banks under investigation, would be widespread
and deep.
The governor of the Bank of
France, Christian Noyer, who says that the bank did nothing wrong, has also
warned of knock-on effects.
And the former president of
the European Central Bank Jean-Claude Trichet has said that a huge fine could trigger
shock waves through the financial system.
The share price of BNP
Paribas, which has provisioned only about 1.1 billion euros for the case, has
not been unduly affected by the recent developments.
Some analysts are sceptical
about the extent of such repercussions. And US authorities have imposed higher
fines on banks.
In 2012, about 10 US banks
paid a total of $78 billion in fines to settle litigation on a wide range of
charges.
Some reports had said that the
BNP Paribas board was split over how to ward off the US authorities.
Some top executives argued
that the bank had done nothing wrong under French and European law, a line
backed by Noyer, and others saying that the bank should not have ventured into
such transactions.
In the statement Chodron de Courcel,
who had spent his entire 42-year-career at the bank, said: "I am proud to
have contributed to building this outstanding group, which has now become one
of the European leaders in its industry."

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